This diversity case presents the sole issue whether false light invasion of privacy is a recognized tort in Ohio. The district court found that it is not, and accordingly dismissed the case on defendants’ motion. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM.
This action arises out of a September 27, 1984 broadcast of an ABC New “20/20” televised investigative report entitled “To Catch a Rapist.” Defendant-appellee Geraldo Rivera (“Rivera”) was the correspondent and defendant-appellee Barbara Walters (“Walters”) was a participant in the broadcast. The report focused on convicted rapist Raymond Ferguson and detailed allegations concerning Ferguson’s lengthy history of committing violent rapes and avoiding meaningful punishment. As reported in the broadcast, in 1984 Ferguson was ultimately convicted by a jury in the Court of Common Pleas for Cuyahoga County, Ohio on one count of rape. The judge presiding over the rape trial was plaintiff-appellant John L. Angelotta.
During the investigation of “To Catch A Rapist,” Rivera interviewed, among others, five of Ferguson’s rape victims, law enforcement representatives, prosecution and defense attorneys, members of the judiciary, and the jurors who cоnvicted Ferguson. The basic thrust of the broadcast was that rape victims who seek to prosecute their attackers often are again “victimized” in court by a system that places the rapе victim's character and personal history on trial while excluding evidence concerning the rapist’s criminal background and propensities.
Judge Angelotta was one of the members of the judiciаry who consented to be interviewed by Rivera. In discussing rape trials in general and his role as judge in the most recent Ferguson trial, Judge Angelotta made the following statements which were broadcast by ABC:
JUDGE JOHN L. ANGELOTTA: A nice girl who gets raped is different than a bad girl who gets raped, a bad girl beingone who carries on this course of conduct with men. To me, she’s a lot different than a good girl when you come to the question of rape — while agreeing that you may not rape either kind of girl.
RIVERA: Do you believe that a bad girl doesn’t have the same rights as a good girl, that a person who has had a sexual past doesn’t have thе same rights as a virgin?
JUDGE ANGELOTTA: Absolutely has precisely the same rights, but it goes to the credibility of the person, you see. The defendant says these things didn’t happen, see? And I think if a nice girl says they did happen, a jury is more apt to believe that. If a bad girl says they did happen, perhaps her credibility is at issue and the jury might not believe her. Maybe she enticed the man.
At another point in the broadcast, Walters and Rivera stаted:
BARBARA WALTERS: Geraldo, I find myself appalled watching this. Not just because of Raymond Ferguson, but the whole idea, this benign judge in Cleveland saying, “Ah, but if it’s a good girl, we understand, but if it’s a bad girl, if she slept with someone, she obviously wanted tо be raped.” I thought we were finished with that attitude. Haven’t we progressed at all in the last 20 years?
GERALDO RIVERA: I hope your anger is reflected in the millions of living rooms across the country right now, because that is the оnly thing that’s going to change that attitude, that dinosaur attitude.
Following this broadcast, Judge Angelotta filed his complaint against defendant-appellees American Broadcasting Corporation (“ABC”), Riverа, and Walters. The claim that is the subject of this appeal 1 invoked section 652E of the Restatement of Torts 2d and charged that defendants’ broadcast constituted an invasion of privacy by casting appellant in a false light. 2 Appellant alleged that he was falsely portrayed as a “macho trial judge who discriminated against women rape victims in favor of their assailants,” and that this portrayal was offensive, and that it injured him and his reputation.
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss and/or strike the claim for false light invasion of privacy. The district court granted the motion, holding that under the rule announcеd by the Ohio Supreme Court in
Yeager v. Local Union 20,
In this diversity case, we must apply state law “in accordance with the then controlling decision of the [state’s] highest court.”
E.g., United States v. Anderson County, Tennessee,
The parties in this case dispute whether the Ohio Supreme Court has “spoken” on
In
Yeager v. Local Union 20,
This court has recognized a cause of action for invasion of privacy in Housh v. Peth (1956),165 Ohio St. 35 ,133 N.E.2d 340 [59 O.O. 60 ]. However, this court has not recognized a cause of action for invasion of privacy under a “false light” theory of recovery. Under the facts of the instant case, we find no rationale which compels us to adopt the “false light” theory of recovery in Ohio at this time. As stated before, it is our view that the complained about language constitutes expressions of opinions, not facts. Even if appellant had styled his cause of action as an invasion of privacy alone, we find that the Housh syllabus does not support a theory of recovery such as this, under thе facts of the case at bar.
Id. at 669-70 (footnote omitted). Appellant claims that the Yeager court did not expressly reject the false light doctrine, but merely declined expressly to adopt the theory on the facts in that case. He argues that the cоurt thus left the question open and that we should look to other sources to determine whether the Ohio court would recognize a false light cause of action.
We find, however, that the Ohio Supreme Court has “spoken” and has thus far declined to adopt a false light cause of action. We note that cases decided in lower courts in Ohio after the
Yeager
decision have interpreted
Yeager
to mean that false light invasion of privacy has not been recognized to date in Ohio.
See, e.g., Wheeler v. Yocum & Dispatch Printing Co.,
No. 85A-828 (Ohio App., March 25, 1986) [Available on WESTLAW, OH-CS database];
Rinehart v. Toledo Blade Co.,
Appellant cites one
post-Yeager
case that seems to look favorably оn the false light theory,
see Penwell v. Taft Broadcasting Co.,
Finally, appellant has cited and relies on a recent decision from the United States District Court for the Nоrthern District of Ohio,
Morgan v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
The defendants may have taken a cheap shot at Judge Angelotta, but they had the right, under the law of Ohio and under the Constitution of the United States, to express their opinion of the “attitude” reflected in what they chose to believe the judge was saying. If the false light theory is ever adopted in Ohio, we doubt that it will be in this kind of case. 3
In deciding whether Ohio recognizes this cause of action, we must be mindful of the proper role of federal courts in diversity cases: “Our respect for the rolе of the state courts as the principal expositors of state law counsels restraint by the federal court in announcing new state-law principles — ”
Grubb v. W. A. Foote Memorial Hosp., Inc.,
Notes
. The other claims were for defamation and intentional and/or negligеnt infliction of emotional distress. These claims were dismissed and are not involved in this appeal.
. "False light” is a theory that emerged as a distinct branch of the invasion of privacy tort in an article by Dеan Prosser in 1960. See Prosser, Privacy, 48 Calif.L.Rev. 383 (1960). Dean Prosser used the phrase "false light in the public eye” to characterize invasion of privacy cases that did not fit into recognized categories of the tort. The fаlse light doctrine has since been included in the Restatement of Torts definition of invasion of privacy, see 3 Restatement Second of Torts § 652. ("The right of privacy is invaded by ... publicity that unreasonably placеd the other in a false light before the public.”)
. We have not discussed the anomaly involved in plaintiffs claiming that there has been a type of "invasion of privacy” tort committed by defendants in this situation where he voluntarily submitted to an interview by the television media.
